Study confirms pianists shape piano timbre through touch

A new scientific study has resolved a century-old debate by showing that a pianist's touch can indeed alter the tone color of piano notes. Researchers used advanced sensors to capture subtle key movements at high speed. The findings indicate that these movements produce audible differences in brightness, heaviness, and clarity.

Researchers led by Dr. Shinichi Furuya of the NeuroPiano Institute and Sony Computer Science Laboratories conducted the study. They employed a custom noncontact system called HackKey to track all 88 piano keys at 1,000 frames per second. Twenty internationally acclaimed pianists performed notes with contrasting tonal qualities such as bright versus dark and light versus heavy sounds.

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Lab participants show stress and irritability from inaudible infrasound in a scientific study, with visualized low-frequency waves and cortisol monitors.
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Study finds infrasound can raise cortisol and irritability even when people can’t hear it

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A small controlled experiment reported in Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience found that exposure to infrasound—ultra-low-frequency vibration below the range of human hearing—was associated with higher salivary cortisol and more negative mood ratings, even though participants could not reliably detect when the infrasound was present.

A study by researchers at Tufts University reveals that some Samoyeds alter the pitch of their howls in response to changes in music, suggesting an inherited vocal ability from wolf ancestors. The findings, published in Current Biology, indicate dogs can perceive and adapt to pitch without vocal learning. This may shed light on the evolutionary origins of human musicality.

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A recent article on Literary Hub discusses the influence of a notable neuroscience book.

Physicists have published research proposing that a single clock could tick both faster and slower at the same time due to quantum effects. The work combines relativity and quantum mechanics in a novel way. Researchers say advances in atomic clock technology may soon allow the idea to be tested in the lab.

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Physicists at New York University have developed a new type of time crystal using sound waves to suspend tiny styrofoam beads, resulting in nonreciprocal interactions that defy Newton's third law of motion. The compact, visible system oscillates in a steady rhythm and was detailed in Physical Review Letters. Researchers suggest potential applications in quantum computing and insights into biological rhythms.

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